“Ghostbusters” star Leslie Jones is “mad as hell,” only this time it is actually a part of the movie.

In the international trailer for the franchise reboot, Jones and her cohorts are busting ghosts at a concert when she tries to crowd surf, only to have everyone move away and let her hit the ground. “I don’t know if it was a race thing or a lady thing but I’m mad as hell,” she says.

The reveal of the joke in the film comes on the heels of Jones’ character being subject to criticism online, leading Jones to announce she was quitting Twitter.

The trailer also gives more screen time to Chris Hemsworth, who will play the Ghostbusters’ receptionist. The new preview also makes it apparent that Kristen Wiig‘s character is head over heels for him.

Before she was approached for the film, Roberts' role was written for a man whose wife is murdered. In order to land her involvement, director/screenwriter Billy Ray recast the role as a woman who loses her daughter.

Producers pushed to rewrite Blunt's character as a man, but writer Taylor Sheridan believed it would alter the film's central dynamic. Blunt plays an FBI agent dispatched to fight the drug war along the U.S.-Mexico border.

Bullock landed the role of "Calamity" Jane Bodine, a character originally written for George Clooney and based on real-life (male) American political consultants working on the 2002 presidential election in Bolivia.

In the TV reboot of the science fiction film, Hampshire took on Brad Pitt's iconic role of mental patient Jeffrey (now "Jennifer") Goines. The reason for the switch? Writers for the show didn't think they could find a male actor to live up to Pitt's part.

In a gender swap that was rumored for years, Sony's gonna call this all-star, all-female team for its "Ghostbusters" reboot due in theaters in 2016. The film marks a rekindling of the comedic chemistry Wiig and McCarthy shared in "Bridesmaids" flanked by "SNL" stars McKinnon and Jones.

1 of 8

Gender-swapping roles has become the new Hollywood trend — and female stars aren’t complaining